✨ Hazardous Substances Regulations
26 MARCH
NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE
(i) the floor, walls, ceiling and doors have a minimum fire-resistance rating of 240/240/240 minutes; and
(ii) every door—
(A) opens towards the outside of the building or room; and
(B) is self-closing; and
(iii) every window in the building or room complies with NZS 4232.2 (1998); and
(b) no part of which is occupied as a dwelling
type A building means a building—
(a) that is—
(i) constructed to provide a platform on which 1 or more containers are located; and
(ii) secured to prevent unauthorised access; and
(iii) part of a secondary containment system; and
(b) the following parts of which are made of non-combustible materials:
(i) the platform; and
(ii) the shelter roof (if any)
type B building means a framed building that—
(a) has non-combustible cladding; and
(b) is part of a secondary containment system
type C building means a building that—
(a) is made of brick, block concrete, or reinforced concrete that has a fire rating of 120/120/120 minutes; and
(b) has a roof made of wood and iron or equivalent products; and
(c) is part of a secondary containment system
type D building means a building that—
(a) is made of brick, block concrete, or reinforced concrete that has a fire-resistance rating of 240/240/240 minutes; and
(b) has a reinforced concrete roof with a fire rating of 240/240/240 minutes; and
(c) is part of a secondary containment system
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Online Sources for this page:
VUW Te Waharoa —
NZ Gazette 2004, No 35
Gazette.govt.nz —
NZ Gazette 2004, No 35
✨ LLM interpretation of page content
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Controls relating to the adverse effects of unintended ignition of class 2 and class 3.1 hazardous substances
(continued from previous page)
🌾 Primary Industries & ResourcesHazardous Substances, Class 2, Class 3.1, Ignition Controls, Safety Regulations, Definitions, Type A Building, Type B Building, Type C Building, Type D Building, Fire-Resistance Rating, Secondary Containment System